
The trend in all of this legislation is clear: More government control, less freedom. And C-36 takes that to a terrible new level.

The trend in all of this legislation is clear: More government control, less freedom. And C-36 takes that to a terrible new level.

The Liberal government is taking the House of Commons Speaker to court, in an unprecedented move to prevent the release of uncensored documents to members of Parliament that offer insight into the firing of two scientists from Canada’s top infectious-disease laboratory.

There is growing outrage in Brooklyn and in Newark after two statues to honor George Floyd were targeted by vandals.

After Dr. Charles Hoffe went public with his experiences in early April of multiple First Nations patients in his village of Lytton who suffered from severe and unique Bell’s Palsy and other neurological adverse effects after receiving the Moderna vaccine, Hoffe was disciplined by BC’s Interior Health Authority only a few weeks later.

“The removal of the sequencing data is described in a new paper posted online Tuesday by Jesse Bloom, a virologist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle,” The Wall Street Journal reported. “The paper, which hasn’t been peer reviewed, says the missing data include sequences from virus samples collected in the Chinese city of Wuhan in January and February of 2020 from patients hospitalized with or suspected of having Covid-19.”

The Trudeau government is proposing legal changes to reduce online hate speech, making it easier for the victims of hate speech to launch complaints.
Originally, we were told it was just “15 days to slow the spread,” and that restrictions were ‘temporary’ for the sole purpose of stopping the healthcare system from collapsing.
Oh, and who can forget when we were supposedly focused on “protecting the most vulnerable,” meaning seniors and immuno-compromised individuals.
How long did that last before they simply shut everything down and kept imposing lockdowns to ‘protect everyone’ regardless of risk?
Parliamentarians rejected a motion by Independent MP Derek Sloan to sanction Facebook and Twitter for censoring a press conference Sloan held last week.
During the conference, Sloan appeared with a number of medical health professionals who detailed ongoing attempts to silence and reprimand them for speaking out against the prevailing COVID-19 narrative.
“This morning, with great solemnity and sadness, I’m announcing that the House will be establishing a select committee on the January 6 insurrection,” Pelosi said. “The select committee will investigate and report on the facts and the causes of the attack and it will report recommendations for the prevention of any future attack.”
Despite the economic records set during the Trump Administration, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) says that her generation hasn’t witnessed a thriving economy since the 1990’s.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Thursday extended a national moratorium barring landlords from evicting renters through the end of July, and said it’s the last time it will renew the controversial ban.
WTF? The CDC has power to make law?

Recently, some cities in British Columbia have cancelled Canada Day celebrations, such as Penticton and Victoria BC. Mayor of Penticton John Vassilaki said that when he heard about the discovery of remains in Kamloops of 215 children, he “thought it was appropriate to hold back and wait to see what the federal government was going to announce.”
They’re called the Liberal party, the very demographic O’Toole has been courting.
Federal 🇨🇦 voting intentions from Abacus Data:
LPC 37%
CPC 27%
NDP 18%
BQ 9% (39% in Qc)
GPC 5%Details and regionals: https://t.co/TWM0LTiNKu
[Abacus Data, June 18-21, 2021, n=2,070]#canpoli pic.twitter.com/VCdzEJvI13
— Philippe J. Fournier (@338Canada) June 24, 2021

How our failure to interrogate scientists, academics, researchers, and journalists is creating a class of (perceived) infallible elites.

Ken Bennett, Senate liaison to the Maricopa County, Arizona, election audit, stated on Friday there are more than 33,000 ballots from November’s election where voters made no selection for president, or at least no votes that were detected by the voting machines.

In her decision, Judge Glennys McVeigh rejected the government’s arguments that the proposed suit failed to meet the legal grounds for certification although individuals could sue on their own, and that the claim had no prospect of success.

“I’m going to commit a radical act: I’m going to speak the truth,” Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) said before making a series of once-undisputed declarations that are now dangerous to voice.

The Trudeau government does not know what a woman is. This is not rhetorical, it is what they have directly said. A ministry known as Women and Gender Equality states that it “does not use a specific definition of ‘woman.'”

The Justice Department announced the formation on Tuesday of “cross-jurisdictional firearms trafficking strike forces” in five major U.S. cities to track and stop the illegal transfer of firearms.
The strike forces, part of President Joe Biden’s strategy to counter spiking violent crime rates across the nation, will launch within 30 days in the Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, and Washington, D.C., metropolitan areas in coordination with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives and other local law enforcement offices.

Those on the right are very quick to disparage the CBC and accuse it of political bias, while those on the left will always come to its defence and point to its alleged cultural importance. Who’s right? In this episode of Chicks and Balances, Sam breaks down the purpose of the CBC, it’s place in the greater Canadian media landscape, and instances of bias. Does Canada Still Need The CBC?